Negative Marginal Densities in Mixed Quantum-Classical Liouville Dynamics
Kai Gu, Jeremy Schofield

TL;DR
This paper investigates the limitations of the mixed quantum-classical Liouville equation (QCLE), revealing that it can produce negative marginal phase-space densities, especially at low energies, which challenges its physical validity.
Contribution
The study demonstrates that QCLE can violate positivity of phase-space densities and analyzes conditions under which these violations occur and diminish.
Findings
QCLE can produce negative marginal densities.
Positivity violations are more prominent at low energies.
Violations decrease as initial energy increases.
Abstract
The mixed quantum-classical Liouville equation (QCLE) provides an approximate perturbative framework for describing the dynamics of systems with coupled quantum and classical degrees of freedom of disparate thermal wavelengths. The evolution governed by the Liouville operator preserves many properties of full quantum dynamics, including the conservation of total population, energy, and purity, and has shown quantitative agreement with exact quantum results for the expectation values of many observables where direct comparisons are feasible. However, since the QCLE density matrix operator is obtained from the partial Wigner transform of the full quantum density matrix, its matrix elements can have negative values, implying that the diagonal matrix elements behave as pseudo-densities rather than densities of classical phase space. Here, we compare phase-space distributions generated by…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpectroscopy and Quantum Chemical Studies · Quantum, superfluid, helium dynamics · Quantum many-body systems
